Very impressive solo grug. I wonder if anyone else has even repeated this feat?

If you don't mind me asking, what's the story behind your solo of Pipeline at Squamish. The fact that you soloed the first free ascent of a 10+ offwidth always kind of blew my mind. Had you done the route before? If you don't want to post specifics I'll understand; soloing is, after all, a very personal matter.

Hey, thanks for all of the kind words. By today's standards, these accomplishments seem like nothing.

As for Pipeline, it was an on-site free-solo. Never even saw the thing up close until the day I did it. Perry Beckham was the one who put the bug in my ear. I did in the Fall of 1979. I remember before I did it, Perry had already come up with the free ascent name for it...Pipeloads. Needless to say, it didn't stick. Pipeline was interestng in that, back then, there were a number (perhaps, four) of fixed pipes that had been sawed off and hammered into the crack. On the free-solo, not only did I not want to taint the ascent by weighting any of these pipes, I was actually afraid to weight them and it was difficult to get around one or two of them.

Luckily, this whole free-solo stuff wasn't something I did for long. I remember backing off a free-solo of the NE Buttress of Higher Cathedral Rock about 10 pitches up in 1981. Ended up down-climbing those 10 pitches and then doing no more soloing until 1995. In 1995, after not climbing for over a year, I was visiting the Valley with my girlfriend, soon to be wife, soon to be ex-wife. I was showing off by free-soloing Generator Crack (in shorts with no shirt on, no less), when I fell and broke my back. Had to get helicoptered out of the Valley and all.

I have cited the Lost Arrow solo various times and gotten no response at all .Hmmm.Wow ,didnt hear anything about your brokeback.Back in the day it was pretty scary climbing with Greg Sometimes.You'would be around a corner and hear sum scuffling around .I would look around and find Greg trying to solo some improbable thing.

Kevin, Yes you're right. I had wanted to solo that thing really bad back then. I was so into offwidths and chimneys at the time and after on-sighting the left side of Reeds figured that I was good enough not to get spit out of anything on the Lost Arrow. Then I talked to Walt in the Village Store one day and he told me about the flakey face climbing part. I knew I wasn't good enough to feel confident on that so I started boning up on my edging skills but it never came to pass....

O.K. so all day long I'm thinking about downclimbing 10 pitches on the E. Buttress of Higher on the solo. From what point was that Grug? I did that route last year after having soloed it a long time ago and this time found it not so easy. It's interesting how one can get into the free-soloing mindset and everything seems straightforward- a pleasant illusion?

I consider Grug's on site free solo of LA Chimney to be one of the boldest ever done in the Trench. There's just no way to get really well plugged into that upper section--just too grainy and akward and those pin scars are full of dirt. I congratulated you then and I do so now.

Thanks Largo. With Bachar, Werner, Croft, Rearden and others free-soloing 5.11 and harder (I still have a hard time fathoming this), it's hard to believe that a solo of a 5.10 route commands much respect (but I'll take it).

Kevin. I may be wrong about the pitch number on the NE Buttress of Higher Cathedral. There's one scary, big step with nothing much for your hands around the 9th or 10th pitch. I remember beginning it, then backing off several times. Finally I said to myself, "This is stupid! I'm going down"

Hey, Man
It’s a sporty solo by any standard back then. I too thought about it. When I did climb it we got a late start, had to spend the night up top in T-shirts no water. Someone had gathered a big stack of firewood before us, but it was still cold. Man that was a long time ago.

Wow, LA Chimney solo! In 77 with Larry Bruce made a trip to the Valley to do wide stuff and a tour of the early Pratt 5.9/5.10s. We were pretty honed and had been to the Umph Slot, Crack O' Fear, Virginia Dale and Vedauwoo lapping wide stuff. Jack Roberts joined us for part of our Pratt research. We had a blast over a two week period and finished up with the Steck/Salathe in a day and the a few days later the LA chimney. We jugged out of the notch on ropes that Molly Higgins and Barb Eastman kindly dropped for us. One of the best, most fun trips ever to the valley. Impressive solo Grug!